7 ways to repurpose an old Android phone

It’s hard to believe, but smartphones as we know them have been around for nearly a decade. And chances are good you’ve upgraded at least once during that time, if not many times.

Usually, that upgrade leaves you with your old phone and a question: What should I do with it? Most common answer: sell it. That’s a good way to help defray the cost of the upgrade.

However, that’s not the only option, and not necessarily even the best. Instead, consider repurposing that old phone. You might be surprised at some of the feats it can perform. Here are some of my favorite uses for a discarded Android:

1. Keep it as a backup phone

This oldie can still be a goodie.

Samsung

It’s a hard truth: Phones get lost, stolen and broken every day. I don’t know about you, but I’d be in pretty dire straits if something happened to my phone.

The straits would be less dire, though, if I could just grab my old standby. I’d still have access to my calendar, contacts, email and the like (because they’re all synced), along with daily-use apps like Facebook, Spotify, Twitter, my password manager and so on. There’s really no better short-term rescue option.

In fact, if you still have your new phone (assuming it’s merely busted and not lost or stolen), you can probably just pop the
SIM card out and back into the old phone, restoring voice and data until repairs are made.

Of course, you don’t have to stick the old phone in a drawer and leave it there in case of disaster; you can also keep it as a low- or even no-cost second line. For example, if it’s an unlocked GSM model, grab a SIM card from Freedompop (about $13, or AU$17, £10) and sign up for the Basic plan. It affords you 200 voice minutes, 500 text messages and 200MB of 4G data per month — at no charge.

2. Use it as a dedicated camcorder

Whatever you’re recording — a wedding, a kid’s soccer game, a music video or your sure-to-win-the-film-fest indie movie — nothing beats multiple cameras. When it comes time to edit, you can mix footage from different angles and positions to create much more interesting video.

Needless to say, your old Android can make a great second camera. Even older, lower-end phones can usually capture at least 1,920×1,080-pixel video at 30 frames per second. Clear out as much storage as possible to make room for new footage and you’re good to go.

3. Use it as a baby monitor

Awwwwww!

Sleekbit

Speaking of video, an Android phone with nothing else to do can easily pull baby-monitor duty, and in fact can rival or even exceed standalone products costing a pretty penny.

All you need is an app like Dormi, which is designed expressly for this purpose. In addition to both audio and video monitoring, the app offers two-way audio so you can talk to (and hopefully soothe) a crying baby from afar.

Speaking of afar, you can tap into the audio/video feeds from just about anywhere, provided the Android phone is connected via Wi-Fi. Dormi also supports multiple “parent” devices to the phone that’s doing the monitoring. The app is free but limits you to four hours per month of monitoring. To unlock lifetime monitoring, there’s a one-time fee of $9 (AU$11.89, £7).

4. Use it as a video doorbell

No baby? Consider putting your Android on door duty instead. No, the phone itself doesn’t go outside; you’ll need to install either an outdoor Wi-Fi webcam or a smart doorbell. Then your phone can serve as a full-time video monitor, one that lives on, say, a coffee table or nightstand.

5. Give it the GoPro treatment

Stick your old phone where you’d normally stick a GoPro.

Velocity Clip

One final video option: Turn your old phone into a GoPro. Again, that’s a solid camera in there, so all you need is a way to mount it for action-video duty. Velocity Clip, for example, offers phone mounts for your bike, chest and head, all of them priced in the $40-to-$50 range (AU$53-AU$66, £31-£39) . Granted, a smartphone is a little unwieldy when strapped to your head, but it’s still way cheaper than buying a separate GoPro.

Whatever mount option you end up with, hit up Ebay for a cheap Bluetooth camera-shutter button. (They’re available for as little as a few dollars.) That way you can start and stop video recording without having to fiddle with the phone while it’s mounted.

6. Create a dedicated VR headset

Don’t buy a VR headset that lacks these lens-adjustment dials.

Battop

Get ready for a surprise. That old Android phone of yours? Virtual reality powerhouse! It’s true: A smartphone can serve up some terrific VR experiences. All you need is a headset and some apps.

Even more surprising: a headset won’t cost you much. Amazon, for example, offers dozens of universally compatible VR goggles priced in the $20-to-$35 range (AU$26-AU$46, £15-£27). Look for a model that lets you adjust focal width and length, the better to accommodate users with less-than-perfect vision. I also recommend choosing one that comes with a Bluetooth gamepad, the better to control games and access menus.

As for the apps, hit the Google Play Store and search for “VR” or “Google Cardboard.” Both will reveal a wealth of games and other experiences that are compatible with nearly any Android and VR headset.

7. Leave it on your nightstand

Voice Snooze Alarm lets you customize the deactivation command.

Gerard Puig

An old phone might just be the best thing to hit your nightstand since the lamp. Because in that one spot, it can serve countless purposes:

Alarm clock: Not ready to roll out of bed yet, but don’t want to fumble for your phone to turn off the alarm? Check out Voice Snooze Alarm, which is exactly what it sounds like: An alarm clock you can snooze with a customizable vocal command. (Come on, you know you’ve always wanted to tell your alarm to “Shut the **** up!” Now you can.)

Clock radio: TuneIn Radio is a good choice, as it has both alarm and sleep-timer features.

Dedicated e-reader: iBooks, Kindle, Nook, OverDrive — you don’t have to limit yourself to just a single app.

Meditation player: I’m partial to Calm, but there are a zillion others.